I was talking about Hillary Clinton.
I would argue that for Islam, they go hand in hand. Sharia Law is politics. Sharia Law is faith. There is no separation of church and state for Islam. (This will appear as somewhat of a tangent, but I assure you, I will bring it back to the topic at hand) This is one of the few times that I believe an issue with religion directly ties into politics, as Islam is a conquering religion. Politics is about the welfare of people of a nation and the world, and the economics that govern it. When you have a religion that wants to be the dominant power, then it becomes political.
In order to parade out my case, here are some links, and thus, the beginning of the tangent. (If you wish to discuss Islam in particular, then just skip all this and go to my final three paragraphs)
For example, this video by Ben Shapiro on the number of radical muslims:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g7TAAw3oQvg&t=8s
Politifact calls Shapiro's video a false set of facts:
http://www.politifact.com/punditfac...o/shapiro-says-majority-muslims-are-radicals/
But, I don't trust Politifact, as they are not an unbiased source. Here is a video which discusses this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1CNTG397kE
And, let us review the reasons given by Politifact as why these projections, despite being based on research, is false. One reason given is that "he used a broad definition of radical." Shapiro actually denoted what he considered "radical," with specifics provided. Add on to this, Politifact never provides a definition of radical, themselves.
Then, Politifact goes on to talk about Sharia Law, saying, "'Sharia guides all aspects of Muslim life, including daily routines, familial and religious obligations, and financial dealings.' "It is a moral code that covers marriage, crime and business. Different branches of Islam use different versions of the law." Sure, great point there Politifact; but you did not disprove Sharia as being moderate or liberal law. Sharia law, as I stated before, is directly tied into Islamic teachings from the Qu'ran.
Politifact also mentions Shapiro's specific percentages relating to Pakistan. "Shapiro looks at a place like Pakistan and says that 76 percent of Muslims want Sharia law in all Muslim countries. Pakistan has 179 million Muslims, therefore, "that is another 135.4 million radicals"(Shapiro)." Then, "we found that the picture is more complicated. Pew reported that 84 percent of Pakistani Muslims wanted Sharia law, but of those, nearly two-thirds said it should only apply to Muslims. Run those numbers through and you get about 54 million Muslims who think all Pakistanis should be subject to Sharia law. That’s about 60 percent fewer than Shapiro said. We are not saying that Pakistan has 54 million radical Muslims. Our point is that more detailed polling data changes the results a great deal." Notice how rather than give an accurate percentage or number, they simply say, essentially, that Shapiro conflated the percentages, ignoring specific statistics. But, that is not what he did. He gave a percentage on Sharia law, which was accurate, and classified that as "radical." Politifact merely suggests that the data is "more complicated."
Note, Politifact's conclusion: "Shapiro said that a majority of Muslims are radicals. To make his numbers work, he had to cherry-pick certain results from public opinion surveys." (Shapiro used Pew Poll Surveys) And, "Shapiro’s definition of radical is so thin as to be practically meaningless and so too are the numbers he brings to bear." Never is a different definition of "radical" provided, nor is Shapiro shown statistically to be false or in error.
So, why mention all of this? Well, it points to Shapiro's projections of radical Islam to be fairly close. Even if one uses the lesser percentages, "Radical Islam" is not a minority, rather a majority.
Also, here is a pew poll analysis on Islam that I found. It is 226 pages. But, if you comb through it, you will find that Shapiro is not far off the mark.
http://www.pewforum.org/files/2013/04/worlds-muslims-religion-politics-society-full-report.pdf
If you need further proof of Islam being a radical religion (not saying all Muslims are radical; just their religion/Prophet), read the Qu'ran. You cannot go ten pages without a call to violence, or an act of violence, against non-muslims.